Or parents who have to secure childcare. |
Wow. I’m really disappointed that someone touting how libraries are open, grocery stores are doing great, and all is well thinks poorly of me. Poster doesn’t like that argument any more! It’s not working for them! Make it stop! |
Any plan you can make the night before, you can make as a contingency plan the night before depending on conditions the next day. That’s what we did gif years before people started having the vapors about an early morning decision. But maybe we’re just more competent parents than you. |
Dear lord, learn to read. I am not that poster. |
Is this inability to plan a millennial thing? The Gen X parents I know all made this work without a big fuss, but it seems like it became high drama as the first of the millennial parents had school aged kids. |
So then you shaft that babysitter? Or cancel your replacement at work after they already went in? Maybe it’s easier if you don’t work. |
Using your logic, if you’re going to pay the babysitter either way, wouldn’t the babysitter prefer to get the money but not work? You’re out the e same amount either way but you’re not burdening other people with the closure. |
I had a deal with our back-up babysitter that if she agreed to cover a snow day that didn’t happen, we paid her 30% of the full day’s pay (we had offered 50% but she wasn’t comfortable taking that much to not work so we settled on 30%). It meant we sometimes paid when the kids went to school, but much less than we would have paid if school closed for no reason. |
So then parents are out the money? Or they’ve swapped shifts with a coworker unnecessarily and taken an unnecessary PTO? There are costs to contingency plans. Maybe it’s easier if you don’t work and/or are rich and have unlimited PTO. |
I get it. I need to stop addressing that poster, who clearly thinks teachers are lazy and have it good, compared to the libraries, airlines, grocery stores. Taking leave to care for children, because no other industry does that! That’s not what you would like to talk about. Please, direct the conversation. |
Those parents are out the money or have swapped shifts today, right? How are they better off now than if they’d made exactly the same plans but APS didn’t close? |
There are also costa to unnecessary closures. I am working from home instead of going to the office today because I couldn’t get a sitter, which means I am missing important meetings and will have to work this weekend to make up the work that won’t get done today. So now I get to add another layer to existing pandemic-related burnout of not getting a day off this weekend, and will be paying for a sitter for part of the weekend so I can go to the office to do it. |
I was the original poster who brought up libraries and it's a very good argument and I still like it quite a lot. Teachers do have it good compared to all these other professions. The fact pattern. -Libraries are a taxpayer funded service, like schools -Libraries are staffed by government workers, like schools -Libraries face covid-related staffing challenges, like schools -Libraries have been forced to make operational adjustments and sometimes reduce services due to covid--related staffing challenged, like schools Where is the difference? Libraries still opening up today same as yesterday. Libraries are behaving as if they have some type of obligation to be open to the public. No other profession seems to think it's normal to say out loud to the community that they can't open because their staff have to watch their kids. Ditto for these other professions. |
The only ones that seem to not suffer any consequences to these bad calls are central office. Make them work. Take the snow days from teacher planning days. You’re home all day, you can plan then. Childcare problems? Tough crap, welcome to the rest of the world. I’ll bet you see fewer stupid calls going forward. |
The central office should absolutely be open today. It's nonsense that they are closed. |